Five Documents, 1999. There's one global war against US
and NATO. IMF policies. U.S. plans to totally dismantle
Yugoslavia and control the Balkans region as a whole. A
call issued to convene a Balkans-Danube Conference Against
the War following NATO bombing of Yugoslavia. Letter from
Serbian trade unionist to antiwar rally in France. The
Final Manifesto adopted by the Balkans Workers'
Conference, Sofia, Bulgaria, November 13-14. San Francisco
Labor Council (AFL-CIO) resolution on the war in
ex-Yugoslavia.

Statement of Secretariat of New Communist Party of
Yugoslavia, 9 June 1999. NKPY does not accept imposed
aggreement which is signed in Belgrade by goverment
of Federal Republic of Yugoslavia, which represents
insignificant modification of NATO's ultimatum to
Yugoslavia, demands legalisation of occupation of Kosovo
and Metohija by NATO troops, which has to be carried out
by United Nations, the tool of USA and NATO. UN still
didn't condemn NATO aggresion on sovereign
Yugoslavia.

By Julijana Mojsilovic, Reuters, Wednesday 4 October
2000. Serbian police ordered striking workers out of a
strategic coal mine on Wednesday in an attempt to break
the most serious of the wave of protests against President
Slobodan Milosevic.

By Brian Murphy, Associated Press, Saturday 4 November
2000. The Kolubara mines strikers used a front-end loader
to ram through police blockades last month in the uprising
that delivered the final blow to Milosevic's
rule. The miners only hope the successor, Kostunica, will
fix the country. Where are the good things we fought
for?

ICFTU Online…, International Labour
Conference in Geneva, June 5–21, 2001. At the UN
conference, the International Confederation of Free Trade
Unions (ICFTU) seeks to discredit the credentials of the
official labor delegation from Yugoslavia on the ground
that it is associated with a workers' state.